A Victorian Guide to Healthy Living
By Thomas Allinson and Anna Selby
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A Victorian Guide to Healthy Living - Thomas Allinson
PART ONE: FOOD
Chapter 1
THE STAFF OF LIFE
THE ALLINSON name lives on today in his bread and, as bread was the very cornerstone of his hygienic medicine, it seems a good place to start. His first collection of essays includes one entitled simply Brown Bread:
‘In my lectures on Health I always advise my hearers to eat brown bread. Now what do I mean by brown bread and why do I recommend its use? By brown bread I mean wheatmeal or wholemeal bread, that is, the entire wheaten grain finely ground and made into bread by any of the known ways, with nothing left out, nor must it be made with chemicals. The reasons why we should use the entire grain are many. Wheat is a seed consisting of an outer covering, commonly called bran, and a starchy kernel from which white flour is made. The bran consists of innutritious ligneous or woody fibres, and also of most of the mineral matter of the wheat, such as the phosphates, iron &consists. Just beneath the outer coat is a layer of cells containing much of the nitrogen in the grain and the great part of this, together with the mineral matter, is lost when we throw away the bran. The result is that by using white bread we get a food which is deficient in mineral matter, the flesh-forming material is in wrong proportions and we are not properly nourished. In consequence, our teeth decay early, our children often suffer from rickets, and we are not satisfied with our food. Mothers who are suckling their children should always eat brown bread, as it helps to form teeth and bones for the child. Rickets arise from a want of lime salts in the blood, and can only be cured by means of brown bread or oatmeal. Giving phosphate of lime alone will not cure. Milk used to be considered a type of perfect food; and so it is for young animals. The type of a perfect solid food for a grown up man is wheat. It contains vegetable nitrogen, for building up muscles; starch for giving heat and force; mineral salts, for bones, teeth &c and a certain amount of innutritious matter which causes a daily action of the bowels. Brown bread and water contain everything necessary for a hard working life. Persons who eat white bread often suffer from an inward craving or sinking; to cure this, recourse is often had to beer, wine or spirits, which lulls the craving for a time. If they ate brown bread they would not suffer from this and we should have a more sober nation.
‘Now, leaving aside the chemical nature of the bran, we come to another point, its use mechanically. The innutritious bran has two very important uses. First, it separates the particles of food and allows the gastric and various intestinal juices to penetrate, and so thoroughly to dissolve all the possible nutriment from the food we eat; and next, by its bulk it helps to fill the stomach, and keeps us from eating too much. It also aids in filling up the small intestines, and stimulates the involuntary muscles of the bowels, thus causing daily laxation. One great curse of this country is constipation which is caused in a great measure by white bread. From constipation arises back-ache, piles, varicocele, varicose veins and ulcers &c; while from the bile and other intestinal excretions not being daily got rid of, we get headache, irritability, dullness, miserable feelings &c….
‘Separating the bran from the flour may be said to have come into fashion at the beginning of the century and as a consequence, pill factories arose, and are now almost a necessary part of the State. Would you banish the pill box from your private cupboard? Then you must drive white bread from your table. All who are naturally costive should use brown bread. I have cured thousands of long-standing cases of constipation simply by its use. Growing children should always eat it, as it forms bones for them, and prevents straining at stool, which sometimes causes falling of the bowel. Adults should use it, as by causing laxation it will leave their heads clearer for their business. Old persons should always use it, as straining of stool in the old may give rise to a stroke of apoplexy.’
Allinson follows this with an essay on Bread and Bread Making in which he explains what makes bread wholemeal – as he produced in his own mill:
‘I am sorry to say it, but many of the samples of bread sent to me have been simply a mixture of bran and white flour. In some cases mixtures of pollards, seconds and flour. To get a perfect bread five things are necessary:
1st Your materials must be of the best kind.
2nd These must be finely ground.
3rd Nothing must be taken away.
4th Nothing injurious must be added.
And 5th The bread should be well baked.
‘I: Only the best materials must be used or the bread will be inferior in flavour and in nourishing qualities. The stuff called wholemeal used by some bakers is nothing but damaged and inferior flour. In France and Germany, bad wheat gives rise to a very distressing condition, known as ergotism, from the ergot of rye being in the flour; whilst in Italy a disease known as pellagra is brought on by eating diseased Indian corn. A mixture of foreign and English wheats gives a better bread, than if either is used separately.
‘II: It must be finely ground. What disgusts many people with wholemeal bread is its coarseness and roughness. Some bread one sees looks as if the wheat had simply been crushed and made into loaves. This is wrong. If the wheat is finely ground, we digest it quicker, get more nutriment from it and our intestines are not irritated by big pieces of bran. Coarse bread causes too loose a condition of the bowels, and so the food is carried off before we get all the nutrient matter from it.
‘III: Nothing must be removed. There are granulated, decorticated and other breads in the market. In all of these a portion of the bran has been removed. This is wrong for the bran has beneficial uses. In the first place, the bran contains mineral matter useful in forming bone and teeth and for the blood; next, the particles of bran give bulk to the food, fill up the intestines, allow the intestinal juices to penetrate into and around the food; and lastly, they also act as a stimulant to the intestinal muscles, and so cause daily action of the bowels. When the entire bran is removed some of the flesh-forming part of the wheaten grain is lost and nearly all the mineral matter.
‘IV: Nothing must be added. An unleavened and aerated bread would be the best if of the entire meal, but I know of none. The next simplest process is to use yeast as a raiser. I object to the various chemical raisers as they may contain impurities, and even if pure do not properly unite, and our teeth and internal organs are injured by the chemicals employed. The ordinary raisers used are baking powders composed of bicarbonate of soda, tartaric acid and powdered rice. This raises bread nicely, but leaves in your loaf tartrate of soda, or even uncombined soda. This soda helps on rheumatism, gout, stone in bladder, kidneys and gall bladder, and produces other evils as well… . A more scientific mixture is hydrochloric or muriatic acid and bicarbonate of soda. The union of these is supposed to leave only common salt in the bread after raising it. In practice there is always an excess of either acid or soda. The latter gives rise to the evils mentioned above and the former is in itself a poison and frequently contains arsenic… .
‘V: Bread should be well baked. A well-baked loaf keeps sweet longer, and is easier of digestion than one half baked. It need not be made light and spongy. There is really no objection to a solid hard loaf except that time is required to chew it….
‘To get pure wheatmeal, the best plan is to have a wheat mill and grind the wheat yourself. Such a mill can be obtained from any large ironmonger. By means of it you are independent of the miller. Good wholemeal bread is made thus: - Put in a bread mug about seven pounds of wholemeal flour. Make a hole in the centre of the flour, and into this pour a quart of warm water, in which half an ounce of German yeast has been dissolved. Gradually stir flour and yeast together until well mixed into a dough, and allow to ferment an hour before the fire. Then add a little more water and a little salt, one or two tablespoonfuls to taste. Knead well again, let it stand for another hour in front of the fire, then fill your bread tins from this, and bake about an hour. A little experience and a few trials will soon make perfect.’
In his third collection of essays, Allinson includes wholemeal bread as the principal item in one entitled Perfect Foods, where he explains just why he believes it is so well suited to man’s metabolism and reveals himself – yet again long before his time – as a champion of whole foods in all forms (not to mention, militant in his fight against constipation):
‘Every animal in its natural state has one or more foods on which it lives, and these he eats in a natural condition. Thus, the lion eats the flesh and smaller bones of the animals it kills. In the Dublin Zoological Gardens they rear lions more successfully than anywhere else because they feed them on goats. The lion can, to a certain extent, eat the bones as well as the flesh of these animals, and so is perfectly nourished. The cow eats grass and from it gets all she wants for her blood, bones, muscles, also fat to keep her warm. Fowls eat entire grains. Even the young chick absorbs some of the shell in which it was contained before being hatched. Uncivilised man eats all parts of the food on which he lives. It is only when individuals form communities, and a fashion in foods is set, that he departs from his natural condition. Nowadays there is scarcely a single article of food that is not emasculated or altered from the condition in which it is supplied by Nature. This custom of eating only parts of food is injurious and leads to disastrous results. The excess of one particular substance in our food means disease due to this excess; whilst deficiency of another part means loss of bodily function or impaired nutrition. There are also some substances in our food which are difficult to be got rid of, and set up disease, unless they carry with them their own dissolvers or solvents.
‘Let us examine by the above fact the bread eaten by the ordinary Englishman. My readers are no doubt aware that I brand white bread as an imperfect, and, therefore, unwholesome article of food. Why do I do this? Because white bread is only a partial food. It is rich in starch, but very deficient in nitrogen, mineral matter and insoluble vegetable fibre. What would be the result if a person lived only on white bread and water? The first result would be obstinate constipation. This is because the bran is removed from the flour before white bread can be made from it. This bran is the natural laxative in our food. It cures constipation by simulating the bowels to act, and by being insoluble it fills up the intestines, gives bulk, and is thus the cause of daily action. The next result would be that the man would lose strength. White flour does not contain much nitrogen, or muscle forming material. The man would consequently feel weak, have little energy, and be unfit for doing much work. Lastly, his bones and teeth would suffer as white flour is deficient in bone-forming material. It is said that dogs fed on white bread die from starvation in six weeks. Whether this is exactly true or not I cannot say; but I do know that the animal would suffer much in consequence. A dog fed on brown bread would be no worse for the experiment.
‘Eat brown bread in its entirety. Grind the wheat as fine as ever you please, but do not have anything removed… . The other foods in common use must be taken as nearly as possible as they come from nature. Oats are best ground finely or coarsely, according to the purpose for which they are used. Do not buy prepared oats, nor those brands whose makers boast that they have removed a part that is not digestible. The insoluble part of food is necessary for the proper functions of nutrition and digestion. Barley, maize and other grains must, for the same reason, be taken as pure and perfect as we can get them….
‘The imperfect foods made from wheat are white flour and its preparations, also macaroni, semolina, and gluten bread. Macaroni and semolina are better foods than white flour, because, being richer in nitrogen, they contain more flesh formers, but being deprived of bran they are constipating. For this reason I always advise macaroni to be eaten with prunes or a green vegetable. Maize meal is eaten in Italy and is called polenta. Hominy, samp and cornflour are made from maize, but are only parts of the grain; their use should be restricted. Fruits are good, wholesome, and blood-purifying foods; generally speaking the skins should be eaten, as in the skin lies much mineral matter, also insoluble particles which prevent constipation. Thus the rinds or skins of apples, pears, peaches, plums, apricots, grapes, cherries, gooseberries and currants should be eaten. The skins of lemons, oranges, pomegranates and bananas must be rejected, as these do not form part of the fruit, but only a covering for it.
‘Cooked vegetables we should also eat as much as possible in their entirety. Thus the leaves of cabbages and cauliflowers should be eaten, likewise the skins of carrots, turnips and even potatoes. Wash them clean and you have nothing to fear. Peel potatoes, cook and eat them, and you find them constipating. Wash your potatoes, roast them and then eat the browned skin, and you will find them more satisfying than peeled ones and not so constipating.
‘When we consider animal products, we find that eggs and milk are fairly good foods, meant rather for the growing calf or chick than man. We can use them in moderation with benefit. Milk we find subjected to many processes, and various products got from it, as cream, butter and cheese. When we separate these things from the milk and eat them, we get an unbalanced dietary. Cream is only so much grease or fat, and when taken into the system as a food it cannot all be used up. Some find that it produces acidity of the stomach, in others its presence causes pimples, boils and skin eruptions and if its use is long continued it helps to cause stoutness, or form fatty and sebaceous tumours and gall stones. What has been said of cream is also applicable to butter. The habit of eating butter with bread is purely one of custom; there is no reason for it in nature or on physiological grounds. When one eats good wholemeal bread there is no necessity for butter at all. If much butter is used on bread, then it causes some of the complaints I name above. Cheese contains most of the fat and curd of milk, with added salt. It is very indigestible food, as it is so close grained. It contains excess of nitrogen and if much of it is eaten disposes to gravelly urine, to stone in bladder, kidneys or gall bladder or even gout and rheumatism. Eaten in small quantity and well masticated it will not do much harm.
‘When we come to consider flesh as food, we find that as an article of diet it is very imperfect. It consists chiefly of fat and nitrogen, and these not in the proportion of a food proper for man. Flesh contains very little lime salts for the bones. Thus when persons dine on white bread, meat and peeled potatoes, with cornflour and say apple rings, they make a most unsatisfactory meal. It is constipating, deficient in laxative and saline matter and must upset the system. Human beings have no right to eat flesh, and those who value their health will not do so.
‘Sugar is another imperfect food, it being a sweet extract of the sugar cane. It is looked upon almost as a necessity. Its use, especially in those who live indoors, leads to want of energy, acidity, flatulence, heartburn, pimples, blotches, boils and headaches. It also helps on eczema, boils, carbuncles, fatty and sebaceous tumours, stoutness and the other complaints mentioned under the results due to cream.
‘MORAL – Eat all foods as nearly as possible as Nature provides them, avoid the artificial ones, and then you will be well, happy, energetic and long lived.’
Chapter 2
VEGETARIANISM
AS MUST be clear from the previous chapter, Allinson was no carnivore. In fact, he was a vegetarian from his twenties until the end of his life and this was principally based on his belief that the human body was simply not designed to eat meat – and if it did, trouble would surely follow. This was, of course, at the time regarded as eccentric at best, and most medical men believed it to be positively dangerous, recommending concoctions such as beef tea for invalids who couldn’t eat solid food but could still thus get the benefits of meat. Allinson, on the contrary, believed that meat caused nothing but problems and fruit and vegetables – again, at the time regarded as foods to eat with caution and in minimal quantities – were far more beneficial. He argues his case in his essay, The Truth about Vegetarianism:
‘The question of diet is one that must attract the attention of every thinking person at some time or other of his life, and as there are certain people who will not take steps of any kind until they are satisfied everything is safe, so there are others who rush in blindly where angels fear to tread. For both these classes and for the public generally I write upon this subject from a purely rational view. We may define a vegetarian as one who does not kill an animal for food, nor will he cause animals to be killed for food, but he may eat animal products, such as eggs, milk, butter, cheese and honey. A vegetarian thus makes an artificial distinction of foods. He eats eggs which may contain potent life and he drinks milk meant for a young calf, but he will not eat the producers of these foods. Life is no criterion to go by, for the vegetarian who eats a bit of cabbage may destroy hundreds of lives on that cabbage and when he drinks any country water, he may swallow an aquatic multitude. The difference between animals and plants is purely an arbitrary one, for where plant life ends and animal life begins is unknown to the scientist. Many plants are higher in intelligence than some animals, and though I myself firmly believe that the primitive diet of man was fruit and grain,